Schomburgk,
Richard Moritz (1811 - 1891)

Born in Freyburg, Germany, in 1811, died in Adelaide, South Australia, in 1891.

Trained as a gardener in Germany, he joined his brother Robert on a joint
British/Prussian scientific expedition to British Guyana in 1844. He emigrated
to South Australia in 1849, settling with other family members near Gawler.
Appointed Director of the Adelaide Botanic Garden in 1865, developing much
of its present infrastructure (Palm House, tropical house for Victoria amazonica,
Museum of Economic Botany, etc.) over the next 25 years. He was influential
in encouraging street tree plantings in Adelaide, and in early forest conservation
measures, and established the major plantings in Adelaide's Botanic Park.
Under his directorship numerous potential crop plants were trialled, particularly
forage and pasture species. He developed the first institutional herbarium
and botanical library in Adelaide. He made few botanical collections, but
his world-wide reference collection is now at AD.

Extracted from: A.E.Orchard (1999) A History of Systematic
Botany in Australia, in Flora of Australia Vol.1, 2nd ed.,
ABRS. [consult for source references]